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Authors: Susanna Gregory

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #General, #Mystery & Detective

The Cheapside Corpse (51 page)

BOOK: The Cheapside Corpse
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He returned to his own plight. Was Lettice still gripping his leg? He could not tell, but it did not matter because he was going down regardless. Then he felt powerful hands fasten around his shoulders, and he began to rise. It was Wiseman, bellowing with the effort of pulling him free.

‘How did you…’ Chaloner could manage no more, and lay gasping on the walkway.

‘Baron sent me to tell you that we were too late,’ whispered the surgeon hoarsely, and Chaloner saw his face was deathly white. ‘The fools freed Widow Porteous, who staggered out shaking hands and breathing into faces. Then she fell down in a faint, and was discovered to be filthy with plague tokens.’

Chaloner glanced at the pit. The surface was ruffled, but gravity was already working, and he imagined it would soon be perfectly smooth, with no evidence of the terrible fate that had befallen three misguided people and jewels belonging to half of London. Then what might have been a hand broke it, and twitched slightly before slipping out of sight.

‘Who was that?’ asked Wiseman hoarsely. ‘Which of them?’

‘I do not know,’ said Chaloner with a shudder. ‘And nor do I want to.’

Epilogue
Three days later, Cheapside

Chaloner stood with Wiseman on the steps to the music shop’s cellar, watching Yaile smooth the surface with a long-handled tool. The builder was still angry that a mischievous rioter had released the lever on his leather bucket, because the resulting finish on the new floor was inferior, but it would be impossible to dig out so many tons of material, so it had to stay as it was.

‘Mind your clothes,’ he instructed. ‘Your wives and sweethearts will not be pleased if you go home covered in muck.’

‘I imagine Hannah will have other things on her mind,’ muttered Wiseman to Chaloner. ‘Such as how to pay her debts.’

Chaloner smiled, the first time he had done so since the terrible events on Tuesday morning. ‘That particular problem is resolved. I do not know if Williamson kept his word or the record of her loan was lost in the fire. Regardless, our slate is clear.’

‘The other bankers profess themselves to be appalled by what happened – not just Joan’s selfish ambitions and the bitter revenge wreaked by Shaw and Lettice, but the craven greed of Taylor himself. They have established rules regarding interest rates, and honourable men now regulate them. Trouble like this will never happen again.’

‘Their good intentions will erode over time,’ predicted Chaloner. ‘Others will see there is money to be made from borrowing and lending at high rates, and the whole cycle will start all over again.’

‘Yes, but not in our lifetimes,’ said Wiseman comfortably.

‘Are you sure about Taylor, Lettice and Shaw?’ asked Chaloner, glancing uneasily into the pit. ‘That their bodies will dissolve?’

Wiseman nodded. ‘Quite sure. There is quicklime in Yaile’s mixture. Of course, it will take time. If someone comes with a spade in the next year or so, there will be questions to answer.’

‘Taylor did not deserve to die so horribly.’ Chaloner was still appalled by what had happened, and the fate of all three haunted his dreams. ‘It was hardly his fault that Misick poisoned him.’

‘He had been gouging his customers for weeks before Misick came along, taking over where Wheler left off. He was not a good man, Chaloner, and I doubt there are many who will miss him.’

‘Not miss in the sense that they want him back, but they are certainly interested in his whereabouts. Silas and Backwell have both paid for searches to be made.’

Wiseman smiled. ‘Williamson has started a rumour that he fled to France, so that should satisfy them for a while. They will give up when they find no clues at the ports.’

Chaloner stared into the pit. ‘And what about the plague?’

‘There were seventeen new cases along Cheapside this morning, with twenty more in St Giles and in the Fleet rookery. The worms are out of the bag, and they will not be easily encouraged back in again.’

Both fell silent when the bell of St Mary le Bow announced the death of another parishioner. The number of chimes indicated a dead woman, and it was followed by two children. In the distance, there were more.

‘There was a fortune in Taylor’s box,’ said Chaloner, turning his attention back to the cellar. ‘There are many who would dig up this pit with their fingernails to lay hold of it.’

‘True,’ acknowledged Wiseman. ‘But we are the only ones who know it is down there, and I will not be telling anyone. However, the situation must be galling for you.’

‘Must it?’

‘A donation from Taylor’s Plague Box would have soothed the Earl’s ire with you for not preventing a run on the banks and an outbreak of plague – and for proving Baron innocent of Wheler’s murder, which means the Earl himself is still vulnerable to a scandal involving stolen curtains.’

‘He will just have to trust Temperance to keep that tale to herself. She promised she would.’

‘He is fortunate she is your friend,’ said Wiseman. ‘But regardless, you must resist the temptation to come here one night with a spade.’

‘You need not worry about that,’ said Chaloner fervently. ‘And if the hoard ever does come to light … well, its discoverers will just have to wonder how it came to be here.’

Wiseman smirked. ‘No one will ever guess the truth!’ Then the grin faded. ‘But it was a nasty affair and I feel soiled by it. Doe was the worst – he killed Wheler so he could be King of Cheapside; he shot Coo, Fatherton and Neve to turn people against Baron—’

‘In revenge for Baron seizing control of Cheapside before he could grab it himself,’ put in Chaloner. ‘Although he need not have bothered: Baron had planned to retire when Wheler died of lung-rot, and the chances were that he would have named Doe as his successor anyway.’

‘He killed Randal with a stray ball during the struggle in Friday Street,’ Wiseman went on, ‘and he planned to murder Baron and Poachin during the riots. Perhaps we should have let him. They are not men we want in our fair city.’

‘I like Baron,’ said Chaloner. ‘He is a thief, a liar and a bullying extortionist, but there is a certain charm about him. And he did risk his life to save London.’

‘True. Will Williamson arrest him? I am told there were more stolen goods in his cellar than there are curtains in the whole of White Hall.’

‘Who knows what Williamson will do?’ Chaloner had had scant contact with the Spymaster since he and Swaddell had made their report three days ago. He supposed the truce was over, and they could return to their usual state of mutual antipathy.

‘Well, Baron is certainly happy for now,’ said Wiseman. ‘Silas gave him his horse back.’

Chaloner was glad. ‘I thought Silas – and Backwell – were the villains at one point, but they met only to discuss the looming crisis and devise ways to handle it. Silas will make an excellent head of the family bank. Better than Taylor, Joan or Evan.’

‘Evan! Silas certainly avenged himself on
him
for that dead-end post in Harwich – he is sailing to New York as we speak, fearful that he will be blamed for the disaster surrounding his father. But Silas deserves his triumph. It was due to him that the city escaped financial ruin – there
was
a run on the banks, but he managed to stall it. So the King will have his war money, and there will be funds to fight the plague – as far as we can.’

‘I still cannot believe the lengths to which Shaw’s hatred drove him,’ said Chaloner. ‘He used any opportunity that arose to spread fear and unrest – Doe’s murderous spree, the bankers’ greed, the unpopular plague measures, Randal’s book. He was like a leech, latching on to anything and everything, and turning it to his own ends. And he used Joan, Misick, Oxley, Farrow…’

‘They did not have to do what he suggested – it was their own decision to follow dark paths. And Misick, for one, should have resisted. He was a
medicus
, for God’s sake – a higher being than other mere mortals.’

‘Maude is not very pleased that I gave away the cabochon she lent me,’ said Chaloner gloomily, segueing to another subject. ‘I have no idea how to replace it.’

Wiseman waved an airy hand. ‘Oh, do not worry about that. I told her that those particular gems are attractive to plague worms, so she is grateful to you for ridding her of it. In fact, she is so glad that she has arranged for you to receive a certain gift.’

‘Christ!’ muttered Chaloner. ‘When the truth comes out—’

‘What truth? Can you prove that my considered medical opinion is wrong? No? Then keep your amateur opinions to yourself. Besides, it is high time that Maude and Temperance put their money towards something more worthwhile than fripperies like curtains.’

‘Curtains,’ said Chaloner disgustedly. ‘The Earl has forgotten that his upholder cheated him, and blames me for the fact that Neve’s replacement is not as talented. My next assignment is with the fleet that is about to fight the Dutch – a case of missing funds from the navy coffers. I am sure he wants me drowned or blown up.’

‘We need every penny we can muster if we are to defeat the enemy,’ said Wiseman sternly, ‘so he is right to send his best man to root out the thieves. But you will like Maude’s gift, I promise. It involves the redemption of certain items from a shop on Foster Lane…’

‘My viols?’ asked Chaloner, his heart quickening.

‘They are waiting at the club. Shall we go there now?’

It was a pretty day when Williamson and Baron met in the Smithfield Meat Market. Both had promised to go alone, but each knew the other had henchmen in the vicinity. Baron attended the meeting openly, but the Spymaster wore a disguise. It was not a very good one, and Baron smothered a grin.

‘To business,’ said Williamson briskly, not bothering with pleasantries. ‘I am a busy man, and cannot afford to squander time.’

‘No,’ agreed Baron mildly. ‘Although you could do worse than delegate to your henchmen. Swaddell and Chaloner are able men.’

‘Chaloner is not my henchman. He has a fine array of talents, but he is too honest for my line of work. It is an annoying trait, especially as it seems to have rubbed off on Swaddell.’

‘Swaddell is honest?’ asked Baron doubtfully.

Williamson grimaced. ‘He recorded every one of the bribes you paid him, and has used them to buy information for the Dutch war. It is good of him, but it makes me very uneasy.’

Baron nodded understanding. ‘A minion’s integrity can be a nuisance if it makes one’s own conscience prick. But you did not come here to discuss the ethics of our chosen trades. How may I be of assistance? Do you have a house that requires some drapery, perhaps?’

‘No,’ said Williamson irritably. ‘I came to discuss your operation along Cheapside. It is illegal to demand a Protection Tax from residents and shopkeepers. It is also illegal to operate gambling dens that play for such high stakes – high enough to ruin Colburn and half the Court.’

‘The laws that restrict what a man may bet are foolish,’ declared Baron, a little dangerously. ‘We are all adults, and should be allowed to decide for ourselves how we spend our money. It is none of the government’s affair.’

‘It is when it bankrupts a goodly number of its ministers,’ Williamson shot back.

‘Would twenty per cent of my takings change your mind?’

‘No, it would not,’ declared Williamson indignantly.

‘Thirty per cent?’

‘Done.’

Historical Note

On 18 June 1912, workmen made one of the most remarkable discoveries in the history of London archaeology: a mass of jewellery and other precious objects, which had lain undisturbed beneath 30–32 Cheapside for at least two hundred and fifty years. No one knows who put it there or why, but it is one of the best collections of Elizabethan and Jacobean treasure ever found – a fabulous jumble of necklaces, cameos, jewels, rings, cabochons, scent bottles, salt cellars and brooches. There were also twenty-four diamond and ruby buttons, a hatpin in the shape of a ship, pearls and a Genovese watch. Known as the Cheapside Hoard, they are held in the London Museum.

A number of theories have been proposed for why someone should have hidden such wealth and neglected to recover it – plague, the Great Fire, the civil wars, or even a burglar, executed before he could tell anyone what he had done – but until more evidence comes to light, all must remain speculation.

The house may have been owned by one Richard Taylor, who was accused of producing ‘fowle and course’ wares in 1606, and faced dismissal from the Goldsmiths’ Company. He suffered a spell in prison, but returned to his work and took a lease on a shop in Cheapside, where he stayed until the 1650s. His partner was Richard Wheler, whose widow Joan is recorded as renting a similar property two doors down. It was somewhere between these two premises that the hoard was discovered, although there is no evidence to say that it belonged to any of the three.

Captain Silas Taylor (no relation) was a Parliamentarian soldier who was Storekeeper of the Harwich Shipyard, as well as an amateur composer and a personal friend of the musician Matthew Locke. He was known to Samuel Pepys, and often appears in the Diary. Evan Taylor (or Tyler) was a printer who worked in the Cheapside area in the mid 1660s.

Another Taylor, also unrelated, was Randal, who wrote
The Court & Kitchin of Elizabeth, Commonly called Joan Cromwel, The Wife of the late Usurper, Truly Described and Represented, And now made Publick for General Satisfaction
. It was printed by Thomas Milbourn on St Martin le Grand in 1664, and republished in 1983 as
Mrs Cromwell’s Cookery Book
. It is a peculiar pamphlet, presumably intended to prove the author’s Royalist convictions by mocking the dead Cromwell’s wife.

There is a theory that Randal had worked in the White Hall kitchens during the Protectorate, and was dismissed ignominiously, but this has never been conclusively proven. Philip Starkey was one of Cromwell’s master-cooks, paid twenty pounds for each ambassadorial function. Mrs Cromwell died a few months after the book was published, at the home of her daughter and son-in-law in Northamptonshire. There is no evidence that she ever saw Randal’s scribblings.

BOOK: The Cheapside Corpse
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